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The Joys and Troubles of a Missionary Life
Posted by Literary Titan

This book is a detailed and deeply personal account of Jowett Murray’s life as a missionary in early 20th-century China, written by his son, David J. Murray. Spanning nearly four decades, the narrative traces Jowett’s journey from his Oxford days to his complex, sometimes conflicted, tenure with the London Missionary Society (LMS) in Tientsin and beyond. With rich use of primary sources, including letters, reports, and institutional records, the book explores not just the man but the cultural, political, and theological tides he swam through. From his educational mission at the Tientsin Anglo Chinese College to his theological work and relationships with local Chinese intellectuals, the story is part biography, part history, and part heartfelt meditation on legacy.
What struck me most was the sheer honesty of the writing. David Murray didn’t sugarcoat his father’s struggles—physical illnesses, internal conflicts with LMS authorities, and the broader colonial tensions that hovered over missionary work. You really feel the weight Jowett carried—not just books and sermons, but moral questions and cultural clashes. Murray’s writing is layered but sharp. You can tell this was a labor of love and also a work of rigorous scholarship. I appreciated how the book never lets you sit comfortably. Just when you start to admire Jowett’s resolve, you’re reminded of the imperialist structures he was tangled in, even while resisting them. That kind of complexity is rare and refreshing.
But the book doesn’t just stay in the realm of politics or theology. There are tender, often funny, sometimes painful moments. A failed sermon here, a sickbed reflection there, an awkward conversation in Mandarin. These are the parts that stayed with me. They’re not grand or historical, but they make Jowett feel real. And David’s personal reflections—especially his shifting understanding of his father—gave the book a soul. There’s grief in these pages, but also reconciliation. You get the sense that the writing process was cathartic, maybe even redemptive. That intimacy, though sometimes quietly delivered, packs an emotional punch.
I would recommend The Joys and Troubles of a Missionary Life to anyone interested in missionary history, Sino-Western relations, or just a good, thoughtful biography. But more than that, this is for readers who like stories that don’t offer easy answers. It’s for those willing to sit with contradictions, to hear a voice from the past filtered through the eyes of a son still trying to make sense of it all. There’s joy here. And trouble. But mostly, there’s truth.
Pages: 214 | ASIN : B0F9VG9ZYY
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Communism & Socialism, David Murray, ebook, goodreads, Ideologies & Doctrines, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoirs, nonfiction, nook, novel, Politics & Social Sciences, read, reader, reading, story, The Joys and Troubles of a Missionary Life, true story, writer, writing




